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  • Type > Text (remove)
  • Series > Transcripts of LBJ Library Oral Histories (remove)
  • Contributor > Wozencraft, Frank M. (remove)

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  • Clark became the acting attorney general. I had to start learning then more what Ramsey Clark's views were so that I could reflect them accurately. This took a while, too, and it was a transition stage for me. Now, at that time I, of course, as all
  • the views of the attorney general so that they could reflect it accurately; Wozencraft's work under Acting Attorney General, and later Attorney General, Ramsey Clark; similarities and differences between Nicholas Katzenbach and Ramsey Clark as attorneys
  • 10, 1966--that might not be the exact date; it may have been a few days before that. After an hour or so with the Attorney General, I then talked with the Deputy Attorney General Ramsey Clark, whom I had also known slightly through knowing his father
  • the Department of Justice; why the bureaus were separate; whose idea it was to merge the bureaus under Justice; HEW's, Treasury's, and Justice's response to the proposal; why the bureaus were not merged under the FBI; Joseph Califano's expectation of support
  • role, in addition, that had started on February 10, 1967. On that day, I was called to [Joseph] Califano's office along with Wilfred Rommel, the assistant director of the Bureau of the Budget in charge of legislative reference. And we were told
  • , depending on the subject matter, or-- W: Usually, the special counsel has overall charge of the executive order picture, in this case, Harry McPherson. There were a good many orders, however, which went through [Joseph] Califano's shop. Larry Levinson
  • to him, and he was able to give me a cram course on international law beyond what the other lawyers had given me. B: Who was in Lands [Division] at this time? Was Mr. [Ramsey] Clark--? W: Clark, no. Clark was Deputy. [Edwin] Weisl [Jr
  • useful thing. Kenneth Clarke [?] and others participated and made enough progress to where they wanted to come back and do it all over again later on. There had been other efforts. One was to write a little treatise documenting the implementation
  • counter-commission led by General Mark Clark; bickering among Selective Service Commission members and lack of direction in the commission; the president's emergency fund; the increase in number of commissions leading up to LBJ and Nixon; the role